Ever since the first clip of Jobssurfaced on the Internet, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has been open about his criticism of the Ashton Kutcher–starring Steve Jobs biopic. At the time, Wozniak fired off an e-mail to Gizmodo lamenting the trailer’s inaccuracies and calling certain plot points and dynamics “totally wrong” and “not close.”

Despite the fact that as of last week, Wozniak still had not seen director Joshua Michael Stern’s complete film—per an e-mail from Wozniak's publicist responding to a VF.com interview request—he has continued to publicly call out the movie’s alleged inaccuracies. In a recent interview with Vulture, Wozniak mentioned one aspect of Apple’s shareholder history that was not addressed in the Kutcher indie.

In one horrifying scene, when Apple goes public, Jobs denies stock shares to a number of old friends who’d been building computers with them since they were in high school. “Does it have me saving them, giving them my shares?” asks Woz, who did start a “Woz Plan,” wherein he gave millions of dollars in stock to several key people, and sold more low-priced shares to about 80 other employees who’d been shut out. “They all made a house off my stock.”

Now Kutcher is countering some of Wozniak’s criticisms, saying in an interview with the A.P. published today that Stern’s production did not have the opportunity to consult with Wozniak and, perhaps more surprisingly, that the tech guru has vested financial interest in the rival film. Explains Kutcher:

“Steve Wozniak is being paid by another company to support their Steve Jobs film. It’s personal for him, but it’s also business. We have to keep that in mind. He was also extremely unavailable to us when producing this film. He’s a brilliant man and I respect his work, but he wasn’t available to us as a resource, so his account isn’t going to be our account because we don’t know exactly what it was. We did the best job we could. Nobody really knows what happened in the rooms.”

Last week, Kutcher echoed the claim, tellingThe Hollywood Reporterthat Wozniak is “being paid by another movie studio to help support their Steve Jobs film.” He added, “The biggest criticism that I’ve ultimately heard is that he wanted it to be represented—his contribution to Apple—fairly. And, in all fairness, the movie’s called Jobs. And it’s about Steve Jobs and the legacy of Steve Jobs, and so I think it focuses more . . . on what his contribution to Apple was.”

Sorkin is adapting Walter Isaacson’s official biography of the late Apple chief,Steve Jobs: The Exclusive Biography. Last November, T.H.R.reported that Sorkin had met with Wozniak to discuss the project, which will comprise three 30-minute scenes, “all set right before three major product launches.”